[AT] From "Farm Collector" - using copper tubing for fuel lines.
Ralph Goff
alfg at sasktel.net
Wed Feb 29 07:16:17 PST 2012
On 2/29/2012 7:07 AM, charlie hill wrote:
> Steve, I agree with what you have said unfortunately it is impossible to
> wash away the problem completely. Once salt gets a hold on steel you get
> what is known as salt chloride contamination which actually gets into the
> steel. Cleaning the surface as you mentioned and completely sealing it from
> the air with good epoxy paint helps but I don't think the problem can ever
> be solved. There is a chemical compound that can be used as a rinse after
> the metal is thoroughly cleaned that supposedly neutralizes the salt
> contamination.
I have pretty much admitted defeat against road salt rust on vehicles I
have to drive in the winter. On my old 81 GM I used to spray the
underside as much as I could reach with used oil. Either motor or
hydraulic oil. I would use the cleaning gun on my air compressor to do
this. Its a dirty job and I doubt the oil mist that I breathed in was a
good thing for my health so I haven't tried it recently. I just park the
truck for the winter.
Ralph in Sask.
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